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Friday, June 27, 2025

Part Three – Godzilla Minus One: Strengths and Stupidities

 

By Joe Gibson

 

This is part three of my written Godzilla Minus One review, but now the full video essay is up on YouTube, so I encourage you to watch it here: https://youtu.be/hPaxuxgz34U?si=r7H00Ftn9eAWAbg-


If you are just jumping in on this blog post and would like to read the review, incomplete as it is compared to the video, here are the links to the previous parts.

 

https://planninecrunch.blogspot.com/2025/06/godzilla-minus-one-strengths-and.html

https://planninecrunch.blogspot.com/2025/06/part-two-godzilla-minus-one-strengths.html

 

Noda pulls some strings to get Shikishima the German plane Shinden, an innovative ship that seems constructed backward with a tail fan. However, it is not airworthy yet and needs a top mechanic to find it, so this is where Tachibana can reenter the movie. The Japanese bureaucracy keeps Shikishima from finding him easily so he sends out a series of letters, designed to draw him out. Thankfully, the plan works, and Tachibana beats him with a stick out of anger but, more importantly, is in the same room with him to hear Shikishima’s pitch. Koichi wants Tachibana to fit the Shinden with explosives so he can do a kamikaze and take out Godzilla once and for all.

 

 

Tachibana knows about the Shinden line of planes once he sees the interceptor and gets to work on it, while the other veterans are beaming during the preparations even though they know the stakes are high. That night, there is a meeting charting Godzilla’s course and they prepare for this assault. Noda launches into a monologue about how the government failed its veterans during the war and how they want this civilian-led effort to result in no casualties. In many ways, this encapsulates many of the themes of this movie, but to understand why we will have to see the resolution to the battle.

 

Shikishima looks clearly conflicted about wanting to kamikaze after hearing these words, and Akitsu and Noda take Mizushima off the mission because they want to leave the country’s future to him, as they are still convinced this will cost their lives. They tell Mizushima that not having seen war is something to be proud of, and, incidentally, in taking him off the mission, they are giving him the motivation he needs to organize a bunch of tugboats to be ready in case the Destroyers need to pull Godzilla out of the water, something that I am spoiling will happen now because the cooperation is a necessary note.

 

Tachibana finds the ejector seat, making him question whether or not he should tell Shikishima about it, and Akiko gives Shikishima a drawing of them and Noriko, presumably making him question whether or not he should commit to the kamikaze because she is precious to him. Shikishima arrives that next morning to the warehouse where they house the Shinden (and I still don’t know how they got it into and out of the warehouse, presumably there is a sliding door for it, but we never see it). Tachibana shows Shikishima the bomb payloads and plane controls. Shikishima’s hand shakes again, and he comments that part of him wants to live, at which point Tachibana reminds him it was the same for the soldiers, but this interaction changes both of their minds about what should happen right now, and what better time to chart their relationship than now?

 

 

I made some pretty definitive claims that not only would the movie not work without Tachibana’s forgiveness of Shikishima but that even in spite of Tachibana’s very brief screen time in this film, it does work and even that the entire cast of this movie feels like real people. According to the novelization, Tachibana and Shikishima avoided each other until their rescue from the island after the war. This is obvious also from how the picture exchange happens. After Shikishima sends those letters, it offends Tachibana greatly, and the novelization apparently tells us that the specifics of what he wrote was that Tachibana fired on a U.S. ship prompting retaliation. However, once Tachibana tracks him down, Shikishima explains that he just used that to flush him out and needs his help to give his life to kill Godzilla. Tachibana is on board with this, and, though he repairs the ejector seat as well as the rest of the Shinden, he does not seem like he wants to tell Shikishima about it until what happens next.

 

Tachibana sees that Shikishima has still held onto the pictures and is now dedicating himself to a heroic sacrifice, but Tachibana also sees that Shikishima has a family to live for like those mechanics did, and Tachibana, embodying the themes of Noda’s earlier monologue, chooses to let Shikishima know about the ejector seat. The words Tachibana says to the Shinden as it takes off have been translated a variety of ways in the different releases and versions of the film I have watched and will probably be different in the novel, but I interpret it as him telling Shikishima to end the cycle of this war, the cycle of how the Japanese government failed the veterans, as Akitsu and Noda earlier commented on.

 

Shikishima’s choice to live in this climax has tension about it because the character could reasonably choose either at this point based on how he has been written, but the film literally showing us in the background Tachibana telling Shikishima about the ejector seat without telling us that is what he is showing him, it is quite predictable that Shikishima will survive if you are audience paying close enough attention. That is fine. A well foreshadowed plot point will often be predictable; it matters more if it is cathartic and still based on these characters making the decision. 

 

Sumiko finds Akiko with a letter Shikishima prepared for her to give to Sumiko with money and explaining she should use the money for Akiko and look after her, and Godzilla is sighted in shallow water or rather the deep sea fish are, so they launch into the next step of their plan, using a recording of Godzilla’s roar to lure him to the target area. Godzilla is quicker than expected and throws the underwater decoy team’s ship into a building, as the Shinden takes off. As I mentioned at the start of this, Shikishima is flying very shortly after getting a nasty bruised black eye. Now, it has mostly healed, but I still see slight evidence of it, and it was like a day and a half ago he got it, so it should still be there. Ultimately, it is not that big of an issue.

 

Over the communication lines, Shikishima checks in and Akitsu responds that he had better not orphan Akiko. It seems like Shikishima has not quite made a decision yet as a telegram reaches the Shikishima household. As there are no other open plotlines for that to be about, I will just say that this is the hospital notifying Shikishima that Noriko is alive after all, and we’ll talk about that more in a second.

 

 

Shikishima lures Godzilla away from the countryside and into position by circling around him, and Godzilla, despite being a slow lumbering brute, has some quick reflexes. It is honestly quite impressive that Shikishima manages to avoid the tail and jaws of Godzilla while he’s moving like that.

 

Anyway, I’ll just say it now. Despite being a real world vehicle in this franchise full of unconventional sci-fi weaponry, from the Shinden’s build-up to its performance in the dogfight, it is one of the coolest vehicles in the entire franchise, easily on par with each Super X from the 80s and 90s films.

 

Godzilla preps and unleashes his atomic breath at the decoy destroyer because he knows it worked well on the Takao beforehand, and Noda realized Godzilla is a thinking creature. Godzilla is burnt from using it again, and Noda explains that Godzilla has to recharge before he can use it again. The Godzilla theme kicks in as the remaining destroyers enact the plan to wrap the freon chambers around Godzilla. And then because the soundtrack wants to piss me off, it does a rendition of the song that the islanders in King Kong vs Godzilla play to put Kong to sleep. It’s a good piece of music, but there’s no reason it and Mahara Mothra (a peaceful ode) should be in this film or the scenes they are in. Evidently, Godzilla feels the same way, because it motivates him to recharge his beam faster. 

 

However, step one of the plan worked, and the freon drags Godzilla down to the depths. Though he likely would have survived anyway, I interpret the visual language of the film showing that Godzilla’s nuclear charge dissipates from his dorsals back into his body as meaning that it helped him to counteract the effects. Because he survived, they implement step two of the plan to use the inflatable rafts to bring him up, but he cuts through the cables halfway through, even as his body is suffering the effects of the explosive decompression. Then, as Mizushima predicted, the destroyers have to pull Godzilla up, but he has arrived with a bunch of tugboats to help. Within moments, the tugboats are hooked up to each destroyer, helping to pull Godzilla up, and that is a bit of an issue. It probably took like a half hour to do that, and the film glosses over that. It is only a presentation issue in the editing though, so I have no real problem with it.

 

They pull Godzilla out of the water but, though he is thrashing in pain, and segments of his skin have exploded outward including an eye, he is still very much alive, readying up another atomic breath. As we all truly knew it would, everything comes down to Shikishima in his kamikaze Shinden. The camera pans over the veterans in shock and horror and very serious expressions except for one extra, the tall one with the mustache, who is pointing up with a big smile on his face. It still confuses me why he is making that face in this scene when everyone around him is acting differently. Maybe he saw Shikishima coming, but I don’t think Shikishima should be visible to any of them yet.

 

 

Shikishima, who has been flying around this whole time, flies in for his charge, outpacing Godzilla’s own beam (the charge is taking longer than usual, but that is probably because Godzilla is very injured right now and according to Yamazaki if Godzilla were to actually fire that beam he would have blown himself up there too). Shikishima looks at Noriko’s picture, aims the Shinden into Godzilla’s mouth and ejects. Everybody thinks Shikishima died to explode Godzilla for a moment, but Noda sees Shikishima’s parachute, and even Tachibana is pleased to hear he survives as we then flashback to Tahcibana showing him the ejector seat. The rest of Godzilla’s body disintegrates, and the veterans salute their fallen foe. The characters actually also did that in the original Godzilla film from 1954, but it is more blatant here.

 

The team makes it back to shore, and Mizushima embraces Shikishima, congratulating him. Sumiko comes up to the crew holding Akiko, and gives him the telegram. It is worth pointing out that Sumiko’s introduction was hitting Shikishima because he did not carry out his kamikaze and now she hits him because he almost did. Shikishima and Akiko race to the hospital where they see Noriko, arm in a sling, head wrapped and in a bed but alive. She asks if Koichi’s war is finally over, confirming they had a conversation about settling down together, probably at the point I speculated. He nods and puts his head on her heart again. However, Noriko has an undulating mark in the shape of Godzilla’s dorsal fins on her neck, and Godzilla’s own heart starts to beat again underwater, referencing the end of Godzilla Mothra King Ghidorah Giant Monsters All Out Attack which itself was referencing Reptilicus, so consequently I have hidden a reference to Repticilus earlier in this script. Let me know in the comments if you find it.

 

 

Noriko’s survival is something of a divisive topic. I do not have an issue with it, and I will explain why, but I am sympathetic to the opposing viewpoint. The initial count of the Ginza attack was (an inclusive or) dead or injured, and she was injured. Any documents to identify her could have been destroyed in the water or the blast, and this unprecedented attack would have flooded the system with so many victims, it would take a while to notify the families definitively. They also, in this case, might have to wait for Noriko to wake up from any hypothetical coma, and we actually do see the hospital reach out to Shikishima once she is awake and ready, but it took a while as I said it would.

 

But okay okay, how did she survive unscathed? Well, it wasn’t exactly unscathed. The Godzilla cell on her neck can mean one of two things: 1. She survived but with radiation poisoning embodied through the G-Cell, which means she does not have much time left, and thus the attack still had a life ending consequence or 2. She would not have survived if not for the application of that Godzilla cell on her neck, which has granted her some of Godzilla’s regeneration. Either one would be tragic and also still work as a justifiable excuse, so I am open-minded to whatever the novelization or a future movie says. 

 

However, again I do not like relying on external media, and I also do not like relying on inferences in a movie that otherwise spelled out so much so meticulously. Noriko was not always supposed to survive this film, and it is very difficult to believe that she did. However, do you remember what I said at the beginning of this about the three steps you will disagree with in analysis, and how it often comes down to comparisons to other media? Is this more or less egregious than when last minute edits saved characters in Frankenstein 1931 and its first sequel Bride of Frankenstein? I do not find it so, because there are easy inferences to make to explain this. Also, those instances did not ruin those films in my critical evaluations of them, so this should not either. It is not ideal, and her survival is one of the weaker parts of this movie, but I have more of an issue with Shikishima’s survival given that it had no assist from the G-Cell.

 

This is a near perfect movie in my estimations, one of the most impressive films on a character, writing and technical level in the Godzilla franchise. But is it the best Godzilla film overall if it still features some flaws? The title of best Godzilla film most commonly describes Minus One or the original film, and Doug Gibson and I recently filmed a debate on this subject you can follow the links to find  before I conclude on this film and give it a score out of 10.

 

Link to the debate: https://youtu.be/bjGSaU7H4TE?si=_AAgVsvy0tZ1aWGN

 

Well, whoever compelled you compelled you. I’m just going to call the debate a draw, yes a draw. My viewpoint got a little more airtime though so I’m confident you at least can understand where I am coming from, but I should probably wrap all of what I’ve talked about up into a neatly digestible conclusion

 

When it comes down to it, Godzilla Minus One is a film very dear to my heart. Otherwise, I do not think I would have spent this amount of time articulating these points. I have heard many commentators say this has features of the Godzilla film they have always wanted, the film they always had in their head as a bizarre reinvention of the 54 film and thus they have an emotional attachment to its ideas. I do not think I am coming from the same place, however. I am just as happy with a serious Godzilla film as I am a wacky one, and I hope that means I can be a little more objective than some others. 

 

Some of the possible issues in this film are naturally up to debate, and there are probably better arguments than mine on both sides of the aisle about Noriko’s survival, Shikishima finding Noriko in Ginza, Shikishima’s own survival in Ginza, Tachibana’s offscreen characterization and the deceptive editing at play for Mizushima and the tugboats hooking up to the ships to pull Godzilla out of the water. Right now, I can only offer you Doug and Joe’s thoughts. 

 

Now, yes, I am aware that in my Godzilla vs Mechagodzilla II review I treated Minus One as a 10 out of 10 film in an aside, and, frankly that was mainly because I wanted an example nobody would question as the best of the best for the specific point I was making. I have never believed Minus One could be a 10 out of 10 for longer than a couple hours at a time after each viewing because there are flaws, as slight as the blatant ones are and as debatable as the remaining issues seem to be. Consequently, based on the strong characters, consistent themes and tense and effective plot, I tend to hover somewhere between an 8 and a 9. If 8.5 seems low to you, then you can take comfort in the fact that, by virtue of arguing the movie is better than I think it is, Doug Gibson’s score is likely higher. (These scores are also arbitrary, and, to the extent that Godzilla Minus One is greater than the sum of its parts, I am only measuring that sum at this time.)

 

 

Regardless of if you think Godzilla Minus One is the best Godzilla film, the second best Godzilla film or some other third option it is clear it is not going anywhere. First, an extended American release, then a rerelease in black and white and an additional rerelease run with BTS interview clips, it took the world by storm. Yes, it is true that Godzilla x Kong made more money and is part of a mostly successful cinematic universe, but Wingard is out (despite saving the Monsterverse), yet Yamazaki will be back for a new movie. Technically it is unconfirmed if it will be a direct sequel or just another project, but come on, you gotta follow up the momentum of this Godzilla, these characters, this film. Hedorah is speculated to be a returning monster for Godzilla to fight, and even Yamazaki seems pleased with that prospect. If anyone is capable of resurrecting that abomination convincingly, it would be Yamazaki. Other possibilities include Anguirus (if the sequel is to homage Godzilla Raids Again) or Rodan (so that the sequel can have as much aerial dogfighting action) or even some mutation akin to Biollante (with the G cells implanted in Noriko’s neck as radiation scars), but whatever monster they choose if Godzilla even has an opponent, I have high hopes that Yamazaki will adapt it well if not perfectly.

 

Let’s look toward the future of Godzilla’s Reiwa era. All Roads Lead to Godzilla Minus Two.

 

 

 

 

 

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